BOOKS - Lolita between Adaptation and Interpretation: From Nabokov's Novel and Screen...
US $9.86
981517
981517
Lolita between Adaptation and Interpretation: From Nabokov's Novel and Screenplay to Kubrick's Film
Author: Anna Piliska
Year: October 15, 2015
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 576 KB
Language: English
Year: October 15, 2015
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 576 KB
Language: English
This book offers a comparative analysis of three versions of Vladimir Nabokovs namely, the original novel (1955), the script written by the novelist himself and published as A Screenplay (1974), and Stanley Kubricks film based on Lolitas storyline (1962). Kubricks final product oscillates between adaptation and interpretation, as it draws from both Nabokovs novel and script, but also uses the improvisational talents of the cast, eventually rendering the directors firm auteurial hand clearly visible throughout the film. The book analyses how various additions and subtractions made first by Nabokov as a scriptwriter, and later by Kubrick as a movie director, influence the reception of the four main Lolita, Humbert Humbert, Charlotte Haze, and Clare Quilty. The original novels multilayered web of intertextual references among them the works of Edgar Allan Poe and the typically Nabokovian critique of Freudian theories becomes significantly reduced in the script and the film, with Kubrick additionally enriching the film version of the story with cinematic references. While Lolita the novel has been extensively researched and commented upon, and some criticism on the two film versions (Kubricks 1962 production, and Lynes 1997 film) is also available, the scope of Between Adaptation and Interpretation includes in its analysis the text of Nabokovs original screenplay, which although ultimately not used by Kubrick provides fascinating insights into how the writer himself envisioned his own creation rendered in a movie adaptation. Kubricks work departs significantly from the contents of both the novel and the screenplay, being closer to an auteurs interpretation of the original piece than its adaptation.